I would like to know how I can insert spaces between every letter in a certain string. E.g. test123
turns into t e s t 1 2 3
, Does anyone know?
2 Answers
As said in comments, simply do that:
var result = string.Join(" ", "test123".ToCharArray());
or, to avoid an unnecessary copy string made by ToCharArray:
var result = string.Join<char>(" ", "test123");
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Though this works, it allocates an unnecessary extra copy of the string. Do you see how to make this work without allocating any extra memory other than the new string? Apr 25, 2020 at 0:54
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Well, reason it out. Why did you say
ToCharArray
in the first place? Apr 25, 2020 at 1:34 -
Just because of the method signature, I need an IEnumerable<char> or an IEnumerable<string> to pass to it. Apr 25, 2020 at 2:00
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ok, if I use
string.Join<char>(" ", "test123");
I won't need to call ToCharArray who creates a string copy. Is that the point? Apr 25, 2020 at 2:05
Start at the end of the string and keep adding a white space as you work your way to the beginning. By working backwards, you don't need to worry about changing lengths or indices. https://dotnetfiddle.net/fC0yec
int i = str.Length-1;
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(str);
while(i > 0){
sb.Insert(i, " ");
i--;
}
string spacedOutStr = sb.ToString();
string output = string.Join(" ", "test123".ToCharArray());
Or"test123".AsEnumerable()
.AsEnumerable
works, my preference here would instead be eitherstring.Join(' ', (IEnumerable<char>)whatever)
orstring.Join<char>(' ', whatever)
. Do you see why these do the same thing?Regex.Replace("test123", "(.)", "$1 ")
. No benchmarks and debatable readability, but it's nice of the language to provide multiple options.